Wednesday, May 14, 2014
Test!
The test today was a success! I got a 90% and I am very proud of myself. I wish I would have gotten just a little bit of a higher grade so that it would move my grade up one point! I am okay though, it is okay I will get the next test and hopefully maybe the blogs could bring me up one point. I want to have an A going into exams. So yeah the test was not that hard, I just got confused on the Roman emperors, but that was all! We don't have class tomorrow so I will see ya Friday!
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Test Tomorrow
Tomorrow we apparently have a test which I wasn't really expecting. It's all on Rome and some of our tests that we took over these past two weeks. The only thing that will be new on it is the power point that we went over yesterday. Today we just went over the power point and went over a few things. That was basically it, that was all we did in class today. I will study hard for this test and I will get a good grade!
Monday, May 12, 2014
Notes
- Decline of the Roman Empire
- AD 180: Rome has problems
-economic- trade is risky, takes too high, food supply dropping
-military- frontiers were hard to patrol, Roman generals fought, soldiers loyalty declined, mercenaries appeared
- Diocletian divided the empire into 2
-Greek-speaking East- had more resources
-Latin- speaking West- Rome, tradition
Diocletian:
Diocletian was the Roman emperor from 284- 305. Living in a poor family when he was younger he rose up to become the cavalry commander to the emperor Carus. He was born in Solin, Croatsia and he died in Split, Croatia.
- AD 324- Constantine becomes emperor over both halves of the empire
-moves the capital from Rome to Byzantium, where Asia met Europe
-after his death, empire is divided again
- this time, "barbarian invaders (Huns, vandals, Visigoths, angles, Saxons, Franks)
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Test
Today we took the test and I am proud of myself because I got an 88%. I also got a (half) ding. It didn't move my grade down either, well at least I don't think it did. I thought the test was pretty easy. Some of them I had to think about and some of them I didn't even have to look at the answers because I already knew them. Tomorrow we don't have class so I will see ya Friday!
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
Notes for tomorrows test
- Where did the first Indo-Europeans settle around 750 B.C.?
Tiber River
- three groups that dominated
-Etruscan's
-Latins
-Greeks
- Tarquin the Proud
was the last of the king's
- Tarquin's son
raped a women and got away with it
- how did Rome move from a monarchy to a republic
-ruled by Etruscan kings(monarchy) who were advised by patricians(aristocracy)
-after Tarquin(tyranny) the government became Res Publica(republic)
- patricians and plebeians
-patrician: upper-class, landowning, established, connected, powerful
-plebeians: common people, workers, small-time farmers, some wealthy none patricians
- Define
-Senate-government assembly of 300 patricians; appointed for life, first by kings, then consuls
-consuls- 2 senator who led the government and military for one-year terms; could veto each other
-tribunes- leaders of the plebeian assembly; first rather powerless, gaining around over the years
- twelve tables
-marked the first time that the laws were written down in Rome
-set up to protect plebeians who were getting pushed around by patricians
-displayed in forum
- Roman republic; modern government and modern document
-the Constitution of the US and its separation of powers
-Senate/ assemblies- US Senate/ House of Reps
-Consuls/Dictator- President of the US
-Senate could act like judges- like our Supreme Court
- kings who ruled between 600 and 500 BC
Forum- Rome's political center
Monday, May 5, 2014
Roman Notes
The word spreads about the risen Jesus
- Paul is instrumental in telling the world about Jesus' life, death, resurrection, and message
- He travels far and wide: Cyprus, Anatolia, Athens, Corinth, Macedonia, Rome, Jerusalem, and maybe even Spain and Britain
- He writes letters to many of those he spoke to- these epistles are part of the New Testament
- if not the efforts of Paul, it is likely that Jesus remains an obscure preacher, instead of the central figure of the world's largest religion
Caligula- good start
- in addition to being Germanicus' son, he was Tiberius' adopted grandson and great- nephew- putting him next in line for emperor
- he started of well: granting bonuses to those in the military, declaring treason trials a thing of the past, and made government spending a matter of public record
- all in all, the first seven months of Caligula's reign were "completely blissful" (according to the historian Philo)
bad finish for Caligula
- he began to fight with the Senate
- he claimed to be god, and had statues displayed in many places- including the Jewish temple in Jerusalem(sacrilege)
- other examples of cruelty and insanity: he slept with other men's wives and bragged about it, indulged in to many spending and sex, and even tried to make his horse a consul and a priest (at least that's what the critics said)
- assassinated by his own aids, AD 41 (pg. 28)
Next in line: Claudius
- ostracized by his family because of his disabilities (limp, slight deafness, possible speech impediment- thought to be cerebral palsy or polio) he was the last adult male in his family when Caligula was killed
- he rose to the occasion: he conquered Britain; he built roads, canals, and aqueducts, he renovated the Circus Maximus
- Had an awful marriage to Messalina, who was quite often unfaithful to him, even plotting to seize power for her lover Silius through a coup- so Claudius had them killed
Meanwhile- religious troubles
- Christianity and Judaism: monotheistic
- romans had many gods, plus at times the emperor was viewed as a god
- AD 66: a group of Jews called the Zeolots tried to rebel, but Roman troops put them down and burned their temple ( except for one wall)
- the western wall today is the holiest of all Jewish shrines
- half a million Jews died in the rebellion
Persecution of Christians
- Romans were harsh toward those who would not worship the emperor
- especially Christians who were viewed as followers of a new, upstart religion (cult)
- often used for "entertainment" purposes in the Colosseum (thrown to the lions etc.)
- despite the opression, Christianity grew quickly- by AD 200 , around 10 percent of the people in the Roman empire were Christians
Friday, May 2, 2014
Notes
- 44 B.C. Caesar secured a vote from the senate making him dictator for life
- his death produced another crop of warlords and more bouts of civil war
- mark Antony and Octavian were the rival loyalists of Caesar
- they joined forces against Caesar's assassins
- Marcus Lepidus formed into a group with them and he was a lesser warlord
- they then divided the roman world
- Octavian was based in Rome
- Lepidus was in north Africa
- and Mark Antony was sin Alexandria
- in 31 B.C. the two halves of Rome's empire went to war
- the Roman version of Greco- Roman civilization prevailed in Western territories
- LO1- the Rule of the Emperors
- princeps- a traditional name for prominent leaders who were considered indispensable to the Republic
- 27 B.C. Augustus was confirmed as commander
- After Augustus won supreme power, Greek city- states in Anatolia began building shrines and sacrificing to "Rome and Augustus
- When Augustus died the Senate declared him a Devine Being like Julius Caesar
- Vespasian was known for cynical sense of humor
- Praetorian Gaurd- legion sized part of his army
- Augustus was convinced that if their peace and stability will last, the changes he made must continue after his death
- Domitian- was Vespasian's son was assassinated near the end of the first century
- the philosopher- statesman was Marcus Aurelius
- he was also called the best of rulers, the cultured and energetic Hadrian, and the wise and dutiful Antoninus
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